Global Underground presents the latest edition in its signature city album series with GU42: Patrice Bäumel– Berlin, due for release on Friday 29th March 2019. The album, which follows the last Global Undergroundcity series installments by Solomun, and James Lavelle, is partof the pioneeringDJ mix album series which includes alumni such asSasha, Carl Cox, Deep Dish, Paul Oakenfold, Danny Tenaglia and John Digweed.

GU42: Patrice Bäumel, Berlinis a tribute from the German DJ and producer to his second home, the album will be available as adouble CD,plus digitaland streaming formats, and a limited Collector’s Edition 2xCD box set with 110-page photo book containing photographer Dean Belcher’s images of Berlin and 4×12 inch square art prints.

Expertly programmed and mixed, GU42 comes as Patrice Bäumel’s career continues to flourish amongst his string of powerful releases on Kompaktand Afterlifeplus his hallowed remixes. His ability to work crowds and deliver powerful experiences is exemplified here. Featuring49 tracksfrom established artists and new talent alike, the two mixes include original works from Patrice himself (with three exclusives ‘Expanse’, ‘Collider’, and Mutant Voices’), alongside Phil Kieran, Guy J, Shlømo, Ripperton, Pig&Dan, Markus Guentner, Swayzak,Matthew Dear, Adam Portand many more.

Patrice’s choice of Berlin was simple; itrepresents the “epicentre of the electronic music world. There is no club scene anywhere else that offers the diversity, freedom, rawness and sheer size of Berlin’s nightlife”. This rings true for many who’ve found the new German capital to be a beacon of freedom, but the city has held a special attraction for him for as long as he can remember. The son of a music journalist father and art historian mother, Bäumel was born in the small East German town of Freital in the communist Eastern Bloc.

Although he grew up behind the Iron Curtain, due to Patrice’s father’s job, music was constantly on around the house during his childhood,from free jazz, Frank Zappa, Nick Cave, Laurie Anderson through to rock and punk bands like The Rolling Stones, The Velvet Underground, Sex Pistols or The Ramones. His father encouraged him to find his own musical path, which led to childhood obsessions with Depeche Mode and The Cure, bands whose melancholic nature are still at the root of Patrice’s sound today. A teenage Bäumelattended his first Love Parade in 1994, and so began a life-long obsession with techno, and the city that defined the genre in Europe.

‘Global Underground Berlin tells my story of a city that has never sold out, that does not know when to stop, that sweeps you off your feet with its relentless energy, that chews you up and spits you out. Had Frank Sinatra lived today, he would be singing about Berlin, the city that never sleeps.’ Patrice Bäumel.